Yes, the more substance you have, the slower the temperature change.
No. A glass of cold water has the same thermal energy level as a large jug of cold water.
yes
The higher of the temperature of a substance, the more thermal energy it has.
Glass
Thermal Energy
total thermal energy
The thermal energy of a substance determines its state, since thermal energy, aka internal energy, is the energy the molecules in the substance have. If the energy exceeds the force holding the substance together the substance undergoes a phase change.The physical state of a substance is related to its temperature, the measure of thermal energy. The substance can change states depending on the temperature, e.g. boiling.
total thermal energy
The higher of the temperature of a substance, the more thermal energy it has.
The amount of thermal energy a substance has is proportional to its temperature
it is thermal energy
Thermal energy is heat. More heat is more thermal energy.
That is called the specific heat.
Glass
Thermal Energy
A substance gains heat, or otherwise known as thermal energy, in many different ways. These can be from pressure, friction, the transformation of chemical energy to thermal energy, the transformation of electromagnetic energy to thermal energy, potential energy to the energy of motion (kinetic energy) or a substance can become exothermic during, and after a chemical change if the amount of energy produced from the broken bonds is greater than the amount of energy required for rearranged bonds to be made.
No, temperature is the amount of thermal energy in a given amount of a substance.
total thermal energy
total thermal energy